BULL. 30] 



SANTA INES SANTA OLALlA 



459 



Santa In^s. A reservation of unsur- 

 veyed, unpatented land, occupied by 52 

 Mission Indians in 1909; situated 240 m. 

 from Mission Tule River agency, in Santa 

 Barbara co., not far from the old Santa 

 Ines mission, s. Cal. These Indians were 

 located on lands belonging to the Cath- 

 olic Church and also what is known as the 

 college grants. Legal steps were taken 

 several years ago to obtain for the use of 

 these Indians the lands on which they 

 had resided, and which they had culti- 

 vated for many years, but the question 

 has not j-et been determined. 

 Santa Ynez.— Ind. Aff. Rep. 1902, 175, 1903. 



Santa Isabel. A Diegueno village about 

 50 m. N. E. of San Diego, s. Cal. Pop. 125 

 in 1873. The name is now given to a 

 reservation of 29,845 acres of waterless, 

 mountainous stock land, with 284 inhab- 

 itants. 



Santa Isabella. — Audubon (1849), Western Jour., 

 169, 1906. Santa Ysabel.— Ames, Rep. Miss. Inds., 

 6, 1373. St. Isabella.— Emory, Recon., 614, 1848. 



Santa Isabel. A group of Mohave ran- 

 cherias, visited and so named by Fray 

 Francisco Garces in 1776; situated at or in 

 the vicinity of the present Needles, s. e. 

 Cal.— Garces, Diary (1776), 234, 1900. 



Santa Isabel. Mentioned as the last 

 Yuma rancheria on the s. side of the Rio 

 Gila; visited by Father Kino in Nov. 

 1701.— Bancroft, No. Mex. States, i, 497, 

 1884. 



Santa Lucia. A former visitation town 

 of San Ignacio de Kadakaman mission, 

 situated 10 leagues distant from it, about 

 lat. 28°, Lower California. Its inhabit- 

 ants were Cochimi. See Venegas, Hist. 

 Cal., I, 421; ii, 198, 1759. 



Santa Lucia de Acuera. A Spanish mis- 

 sion of the 17th century, established at 

 the Timucuan town of Acuera, on the e. 

 coast of Florida, s. of Cape Canaveral. 

 It was probably destroyed, with the other 

 Timucuan missions, in the invasion of the 

 hostile Creeks and Carolina troops about 

 1705. Distinct from Acquera. (.i. m.) 



Santa Margarita. A name applied by 

 Fray Francisco Garces (Diary, 411, 1900) 

 in 1776 to a rancheria, probably of the 

 Walapai, near the Cerbat mts. of w. 

 Arizona. 



Santa Margarita. Given by Bancroft 

 (Nat. Races, i, 460, 1874) as a Luisefio 

 village of California, but it perhaps be- 

 longed to the Shoshonean Kawia. 



Santa Maria (Saint Mary). A settle- 

 ment, probably of a people speaking a 

 Cochimi dialect, situated 5 leagues n. of 

 the mission of Nuestra Senora de Guad- 

 alupe, above lat. 27°, Lower California. 

 In 1745 it was a visita of the mission men- 

 tioned. See Venegas, Hist. Cal., ii, 198, 

 1759. 



Santa Maria de los Dolores (Saint Mary 

 of the Sorrows). A former pueblo of the 

 Jova, with 180 inhal)itants in 1730; situ- 

 ated in E. Sonora, Mexico, near Rio Viejo, 



a tributary of the Yaqui. It formed a 

 visita of the mission of Teopari prior to 

 the abandonment of that pueblo on ac- 

 count of Apache depredations in the latter 

 part of the 18th century. 

 Dolores. — Rivera (17.30) quoted by Bancroft, No. 

 Mex. States, i, 514, 1884. los Dolores.— Orozco y 

 Berra, Geog., 345, 1864. Santa Maria de los Do- 

 lores.— Rivera (1730) cited by Bandelier in Arch. 

 Inst. Papers, iv, 510, 1892. 



Santa Maria de Palaxy. A settlement 

 at the mouth of Yellow r., Santa Rosa 

 CO., w. Fla., probably one of the villages 

 into which the remnant of the Apalachee 

 was gathered after 1718. 



Santa Maria Magdalena. A mission 

 founded by Father Linck's two associates, 

 Ames and Diez, at Cabujakaamang, in 

 lat. 30° or 31°, Lower California. It was 

 the last Jesuit mission established in that 

 territory. For reference to its language, 

 see Buschmann, Spuren, 472, 1858, and 

 consult also Venegas, Hist. Cal., ii, 199, 

 1759. 



Cabujacaamang. — Clavljero, Hist. Baja Cal., 108, 

 1852. Cabujakaamang. — Clavigero, Sloria della 

 Cal., II, 181, 17S9. Cabujakamang.— Shea, Cath. 

 Miss., 90, 1855. Santa Maria.— Taylor quoted by 

 Browne, Res. Pac. Slope, app., 50, 1869. Santa 

 Maria de los Angeles de Kaliu Juacama. — Taylor in 

 Cal. Farmer, Jan. 24, 1862. St. Mary's.— Shea, op. cit. 



Santa Maria Magdalena. A former Te- 

 moris pueblo in Chinipas valley, w. Chi- 

 huahua, Mexico; pop. 585 in 1678. — Oroz- 

 co y Berra, Geog., 324, 1864. 



Santa Marta (Saint Martha). A visita of 

 San Ignacio de Kadakaman mission and 

 situated 11 leagues from it, in lat. 28°, 

 Lower California, in 1745. 

 Santa Martha.— Venegas, Hist. Cal., ii, 198, 1759. 



Santa Monica. A visita of San Ignacio 

 de Kadakaman mission, situated 7 leagues 

 from it, about lat. 28°, Lower California, 

 in 1745.— Venegas, Hist. Cal., ii., 198, 

 1759. 



Santan (corruption of Span. Santa Ana). 

 A Pima settlement on the n. bank of Rio 

 Gila, opposite the Pima agency, s. Ariz. 

 Ao'pohium.— Russell in 26th Rep. B. A. E., 23, 1908 

 (native name, of unknown meaning). 



Santa Nynfa. A visita of San Ignacio de 

 Kadakaman mission, situated 5 leagues 

 from it, about lat. 28°, Lower California, 

 in 1745. 



Santa Nympha.— Venegas, Hist. Cal., i, 421, 1759. 

 Santa Nynfa.— Ibid., ll, 198, 1759. 



Santa Olalla. A "laguna," or perhaps 

 more strictly a flat subject to inundation, 

 which in the 18th century contained some 

 Yuma rancherias; situated in n. Lower 

 California, lat. 32° 33', somewhat above 

 the entrance of New r. to the main flood- 

 plain of the Rio Colorado, 6 to 10 m. w. 

 of the latter and about 8 leagues w. s. w. 

 of the mouth of the Gila. It was notable, 

 at the time named, as the end of the 

 Yuma and the beginning of the Cajuen- 

 che settlements. The Comeya also de- 

 scended "to this land to eat calabashes 

 and other fruits of the river. ' ' See Cones, 

 Garc6s Diary (1775-6), 165 et seq., 1900. 



